Every family's old photo album tells a story,
but Duane Cramer lets his tell African American history

Recognition (Waccamaw Indians)

GENEALOGY LIBRARY NAMED "HOT SPOT" http://www.examiner.net/stories/021905/new_021905026.shtml
"In its December 2004 issue, Family Tree Magazine named Independence as one
of 11 "Family History Hot Spots" because of the Genealogy and Local
History Branch of Mid-Continent Public Library and its popularity with
genealogists. What makes the 12,000-square-foot Genealogy and Local History
Branch so popular is that it has so much to offer: More than 60,000 books,
30,000 plus rolls of microfilm and more than 475,000 microfiche, as well some
2,000 historical maps and genealogy periodical titles."

EVERY FAMILY'S OLD PHOTO ALBUM TELLS A STORY http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/02/19/DDGSHBDGF51.DTL&type=art"It's not hard to figure out where Duane Cramer
got his talent for photography. Cramer has lovingly restored and collected
photographs of five generations of his family that are now on exhibit at one of
the San Francisco Airport museums. "Preserving and presenting history runs
in my family's blood," Cramer writes in his artist statement."